Dell Looks to Turn Netbooks into Navigation Devices

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Say hello to your latest personal navigation device: a netbook. Dell plans to introduce a GPS and Wi-Fi card that can be integrated into the company’s netbooks to turn them into gizmos that can offer turn-by-turn direction as well as any Garmin or TomTom.

“Smartphones already have GPS capabilities,” says Alan Sicher, senior wireless product manager at Dell. “We are now bringning it to netbooks so the devices know where you are and can help you where you want to go.”

Customers will have the option to buy the $69 card called the Wireless 700 when ordering their Dell Mini 10 netbook.

Dell’s move comes at a time when navigation devices makers are looking beyond the traditional standalone GPS gadget and are offering their software on other devices.  Last month, TomTom announced that its turn-by-turn directions app would be available on the iPhone. TomTom will also offer accessories such as a car mounting dock and power charger. Meanwhile, Dell is hoping to capitalize on the explosive sales of netbooks.

Dell netbooks with the integrated GPS cards will allow consumers to pop open a netbook and get directions and also also make their netbook location aware. For instance, buyers can geo-tag photos on Flickr or check weather information customized to their current location. The Wireless 700 card combines Broadcom’s GPS technology and Skyhook Wireless’ Wi-Fi positioning solutions.

As for the navigation software, it offers 2D and 3D map views, save addresses for a trip and route optimization– pretty much all the things that a standard GPS devices does.

Netbooks are petite devices still it is difficult to imagine consumers carrying it around as a GPS navigation device or using it their car to find their way around–especially when smaller-sized cellphones could do the job.

Sicher says Dell’s GPS-capable netbooks will come in handy for international travelers. “If you are traveling to Europe romaing costs can be pretty pricey for your cellphone,” he says.

The GPS netbooks could also be handy in areas where cellphone coverage is weak, says Sicher. But there’s fine print to the turn-by-turn directions navigation software on the netbook. Though it will be free for buyers of the card and the netbook, the maps will be updated yearly and customers could be charged for the updates.

Dell plans to offer accessories such as car charger and a dock for the netbooks but they will be available later this month. The GPS cards will be available starting July 7.

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Photo: (watchcaddy/Flickr)


So Long, HackBook: You’re Useless Now Thanks to iPhone 3GS

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After a mere nine months, I’m dumping my Hackintosh netbook (more precisely, selling it to my editor Dylan Tweney so his children can make better use of it). This is by far the shortest relationship I’ve ever had with any of my gadgets. Why the abrupt end? Oddly enough, the puny, low-powered computer didn’t fit into my lifestyle. And my recent purchase of an iPhone 3GS made the netbook completely lose relevance.

Allow me to explain.

Like I said in a previous post, my Hackintosh (10-inch MSI Wind) and I went through a brief honey moon phase before stuff got rocky. Most notably, I eventually encountered problems with Wi-Fi connectivity in “Hack OS X.” And the most annoying quirk was when the netbook kept shutting down with the slightest bump or nudge.

But even then, I gave my HackBook a second, third and fourth chance. I fixed the aforementioned problems. And then I kept finding weird applications for the netbook: I turned it into a pet cam to check on my kitten, and recently I used it as a virtual instruction manual to guide me through installing an iPod-integration kit in my car trunk. While the netbook was indeed useful for these instances, I realize these are rather rare instances. (My kitten has grown since, so I no longer need to check on her. And how often am I going to be installing iPod kits in cars?)

Then came the iPhone 3GS, which I purchased June 19. After work, I found myself plopping down on my couch and pulling out my iPhone to browse the web, check e-mail and instant message friends. The speed boost makes the iPhone much more bearable to use as a companion computer for extended periods of time. And the introduction of push IMing enabled me to switch between apps without logging out of chats. With those two changes, the iPhone 3GS became a perfectly adequate gadget for casual computing — perhaps even better than my netbook, whose keyboard and track pad create a pretty crampy experience over time.

During Apple’s quarterly earnings call in October 2008, Steve Jobs said the iPhone could compensate for Apple’s lack of a netbook offering. Back then, I disagreed with him because the previous iPhones were just too slow for me, and the lack of the ability to run multiple apps in the background was a serious drag. But the 3GS and iPhone 3.0 OS cover those shortcomings, and Apple could stall for even longer on offering a netbook if the company chose to.

One could argue that a netbook would be better than the iPhone 3GS for doing work. I’ll be honest: I didn’t get crap done on my netbook. I tried reporting for Gadget Lab once using my HackBook, and I gave up after 30 minutes squinting at the 10-inch screen. (For serious work, I use a MacBook Pro.) I could find a bunch more kooky applications for my netbook, but let’s face it: If you’re looking for reasons to use something, it means you don’t need it.

Crazy how much can change in just nine months, huh?

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Photo: Brian X. Chen/Wired.com


So Long Desktop PC, You Suck

Desktop PCs have been in decline for a decade, and countless people have said their piece about it. But new evidence suggests the desktop tower’s death spiral is underway—and we’re not too broken up about it.

I say this as a guy who was baptized into the tech world with a desktop; who still obsessively follows the latest PC components from Intel, Nvidia, ATI and the like; who has built, fixed or upgraded more towers than I care to remember; and who, until a few years ago, was an avid PC gamer. As someone who would be, by most measures, a desktop-PC kinda guy, I just can’t go on pretending there’s a future for them.

The State of the Industry
This is more than a hunch; a grim future is borne out by the numbers. A week ago, iSuppli issued a broad report on the state of the PC industry. The leading claim was predictable: The PC industry was experiencing lower-than-expected quarterly sales—down about 8% from the same time last year. This included laptops, and made sense, because the whole economy’s gone to hell, right? People aren’t buying computers.

Except that’s not quite what’s happening. In the same period, laptop shipments—already higher than desktop shipments on the whole—grew 10% over last year. Desktops were entirely to blame, dropping by an astounding 23%. That’s not decline—it’s free fall.

Stephen Baker, an analyst for industry watchers NPD, shared with me a wider picture of how retail PC sales break down. The way he put it made measuring the rise and fall of sales percentages seem dumb—there really aren’t any sales to lose: “In US retail, 80% of sales are notebooks now,” he said. “Start throwing in stuff like iMacs and all-in-ones”—which share more hardware DNA with laptops and netbooks than traditional desktops—”and it gets even higher.”

The Buyer’s Dilemma
To understand why this is happening doesn’t take anything more than a little empathy. Put yourself in the shoes of any number of potential consumers, be it kids, adults, techies, or luddites. In virtually any scenario, a laptop is the sensible buy.

Take my dad. Despite spending three decades in front of commercial jet instrument panels, his relationship with computers is, at best, strained. When he came to me a few months ago asking for advice about a laptop to replace his desktop, I assumed it was a just a whim, based on what he saw happening around him. It wasn’t, at all. As someone who uses a computer mostly for news, email, music, etc—like a significant part of the population—he was actually being intensely rational. A laptop would do everything he needs simply and wirelessly, with a negligible price difference from a functionally equivalent desktop. If he wants a monitor, keyboard and mouse, he can just attach them. Choosing a desktop PC wouldn’t just be a not-quite-as-good choice—it’d be a bad one.

The TradeoffsLet’s look at mainly stock examples taken (hastily) from Dell’s current product line. Their configurations could be tweaked and changed to make desktops look slightly better or slightly worse, but we chose them because they are typical budget-minded consumer choices. We are not talking about workstations, and we’re not talking about all-in-ones, because if anything, they are keeping this category alive. When it comes to pure household computer buying, you can hunt for deals all you want, but laptops and desktops are more closely paired than you might expect.

That’s not to say that there aren’t noticeable tradeoffs. Graphics performance, although I wasn’t specifically angling for that with these configurations, is generally better in a desktop. Likewise, hard drives—being that desktops use larger, cheaper 3.5-inch units—are faster and more capacious across the board. Greater amounts of RAM can be had for less in a desktop, the optical drives can be slightly faster, and the ports for those and other drives can be used for expansion.

But these tradeoffs aren’t nearly as pronounced as they once were, nor are they as consequential. On account of the huge demand and sales volume, newer mobile processors have become a hotbed for innovation, now rivaling most any desktop processor, and mobile graphics engines—though still markedly inferior to dedicated desktop cards—have improved vastly in recent years, to a point where most consumers are more than satisfied.

And if you really look out for them, there are some amazing deals to be had on new notebooks. (Look at Acer’s 15-inch, 2.1GHz Core 2 Duo, 4GB DDR3 RAM laptop with 1GB GeForce GT130 graphics card and Blu-ray for $750, and then try to build the equivalent in a desktop at the same price.)

The important takeaway here is that the performance sacrifice you make in owning laptop is minimal, and mitigated, or even outweighed, by its practical advantages. Want a bigger screen on your notebook? Hook it up your HDTV. Want more storage? Buy a cheap, stylish bus-powered external USB drive. Want to use your desktop on the toilet? Good freakin’ luck.

The image associated with this post is best viewed using a browser.The Fall of the Gaming PC
But to say that the average user doesn’t have any reason to buy a hulking beige box isn’t that controversial, and even borders on obvious. The real, emotional, diehard support for the form factor is going to be found elsewhere anyway. I mean, hey, what about gamers? Have you ever tried to play Crysis on an Inspiron? Let’s jump back to the numbers.

Last year saw a huge 26% increase in game sales across platforms, powered mostly by Xbox 360, Wii and Nintendo DS sales, according to NPD. Breaking that number down, we see PC game sales down by 14%. That decrease barely even registered in the broader scheme of things, since total PC game sales amounted to just $700m of the industry’s $11b take. This year is looking even worse. You know what, let’s just call this one too: PC gaming? Also dead. Update: Luke at Kotaku points out that NPD’s numbers only cover retail game sales, where PC gaming is hurting the most. Due mostly to MMOs—hardly the exclusive domain of desktops—the PC gaming industry take is actually higher.

As the laptop is to my old man, the console is to the gamer. Just a few years ago, buying—or just as likely, building—a high-end gaming PC granted you access to a rich, unique section of the gaming world. Dropping a pile of cash for ATI’s Radeon 9800 to get that precious 128MB of VRAM was damn well worth it, since there was no other way to play your Half Life 2 and your Doom 3. PC titles were often demonstrably better than console games, and practically owned the concept of multiplayer gaming—a situation that’s changed, or even reversed, since all the major consoles now live online. We even spotted a prominent PC magazine editor (and friend of Giz) copping on Twitter to buying an Xbox game because it has multiplayer features the PC version doesn’t. Yes, things are different now.

NPD’s Baker sees it too: “Go back two years ago and think about all the buzz that someone like Falcon or Alienware or Voodoo was generating, and how much buzz they generate now, that might be a little bit telling.” He adds, “There’s considerably less interest in high powered gaming machines.” They’re luxury items in every sense, from their limited utility to their ridiculous price to their extremely low sales.

A Form Factor on Life Support
But no matter how irrational a choice the desktop tower is for the regular consumer, sales won’t hit zero anytime soon. As we’ve hinted, much of this can be explained by simple niche markets: Some businesses will always need powerful workstations; older folks will feel comfortable with a familiar form factor; some people will want a tower as a central file or media server; DIY types will insist on the economy and environmental benefit of desktop’s upgradeability; and a core contingent of diehard PC gamers, despite their drastically thinning ranks, will keep on building their LED-riddled, liquid-cooled megatowers until the day they die.

Baker sees another factor—less organic, more cynical—that’ll keep the numbers from bottoming too hard. “Desktops are a lot more profitable than notebooks for a lot of reasons, not the least of which is that big shiny monitor, which has a nice margin attached to it. For the retailers, people tend to buy a lot more peripherals and accessories when they buy desktops than when they buy notebooks.” Even if the volumes are ultra-low and concept is bankrupt, retailers are going to keep bloated, price-inflated desktops and desktop accessories out there on the sales floor until they’ve drained every last dollar out of them.

You’ll see plenty of desktop towers for years to come, in megamarts if not in people’s homes. You’ll still hear news about the latest, greatest graphics cards, desktop processors and the like. Enthusiasts and fansites will stay as enthusiastic and fanatical as they’ve ever been. These, though, are lagging indicators, trailing behind a dead (or maybe more accurately, undead) computing ideal that the computer-using public has pretty much finished abandoning.

Video: MacBook Transforms into Miniature Spaceship, Flies Away


This splendid video appears to be a viral ad for La Poste, the French post office. The problem is that it’s in French, a language which, as an Englishman, I am genetically incapable of understanding.

What is clear is that after a few clicks on the La Poste site, the featured MacBook is compelled to transform into a small spaceship and fly out the window, presumably to deliver an “electronic mail”. It’s a fantastic bit of  free promotion with one obvious problem: It’s a well known fact that anti-gravity thrusters are absolutely terrible for battery life. Also, what kind of MacBook is that anyway? It appears to have the screen of the MacBook Air and the body of an unibody MacBook. We declare this to be a fake.

MacBooks, robots in disguise [El Reg]


Touch Book Tablet Netbook Will Ship Next Month

The Touch Book, which first showed its pretty little face at the DEMO 09 conference back in March of this year, is just about to ship. But who cares, right? It’s just another netbook, after all.

Well, no. The company behind the little computer, Always Innovating, actually lives up to its name. The standout feature is the detachable touch display, an 8.9-inch presure sensitive tablet which can live separately from the keyboard section. When joined to the keyboard (95% full-size) it acts much like a regular netbook.

The CPU is an ARM chip from Texas Instruments, the OMAP3530, running with 256MB RAM and 256MB of NAND memory. There is no hard drive — instead you get an 8GB SD card. You’ll also find Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, a 3D accelerometer and three USB ports. The display is held in place by magnets (and spikes, as you see in the picture).

The price remains the same as it did when announced: $300 for the tablet section or $400 if you want the keyboard, too. If that ARM chip is up to the task of running simple applications, and the batteries can last long enough, this could actually be a very neat little portable. The problem, though, will be if people buy it expecting it to be a real laptop replacement. In which case, mass disappointment will ensue.

Always Innovating’s Touch Book Netbook in Production [Laptop Mag]

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Nvidia Denies Plans to Sell its own Tegra Netbooks

mobinnova-elanSorry Nvidia fans, there’s no Nvidia Tegra netbook on the horizon.

Contrary to reports that Nvidia is planning to release a netbook made  by Taiwanese manufacturer Mobinnova under its brand, the company says it has no plans to do so.

“It’s not true,” Derek Perez, director of public relations for Nvidia told Wired.com

Nvidia will focus on getting its Tegra system-on-a-chip into cellphones and mobile internet devices produced by its partners. The company launched Tegra earlier this month as an ultra-low power chip package that could significantly improve audio and video processing capabilities in pint-sized devices. Tegra includes an 800-MHz ARM CPU, a high-definition video processor, an imaging processor, an audio processor and an ultralow-power GeForce GPU, that can be used together or independently.

Nvidia will support Mobinnova, which announced a Tegra-powered netbook called élan earlier this month. The élan is expected to be the size of a hardcover book, weigh less than 2 pounds and offer five to ten hours of high-definition video playback.

Looks like Mobinnova will have to market élan on its own or find another company to rebrand the product.

Photo: Mobinnova élan netbook/Mobinnova


Hands On With Disney’s Netbook for Kids

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Disney, in partnership with Asus, is set to launch a new netbook called Disney Netpal that will be targeted at kids ages six to 12 and will come with features such as parental controls and a customized Disney user interface.

“This is not a toy,” says Thompson Richmond, director of consumer electronics for Disney Consumer Products. “It’s a real product with features that you can put safely into the hands of kids.”

It just happens to come in pink, with lacey curlicues and a big Disney logo right in the middle.

The $350 netbook will be available in August. Here’s a quick hands on with the Netpal and its key features.

Design

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The Disney netbooks are rebranded Asus Eee PCs so if you are familiar with the Asus look and design, there’s a sense of deja vu with the Disney Netpal.

The Netpal will be available in two colors: “blue for boys and pink for girls.” The pink is a Pepto-Bismol pink and has floral patterns on the netbook cover, while the blue is more muted.

The keyboard is built to be “spill-proof,” says Richmond, and the corners of the netbook have been reinforced to ensure it doesn’t crack easily.

The netbook has a 8.9-inch display, Wi-Fi connectivity and comes with the option of a 160 GB hard drive or a 16 GB solid state drive.

In terms of hardware alone, there’s little to distinguish the machine from its peers. In that respect Dell’s latest netbook targeted at kids, which has a rubber-like case and an anti-microbial keyboard, surpasses the Netpal.

User Interface

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Where Disney hopes to score over rivals like Dell is in the user experience. Like most netbooks, the Netpal runs Windows XP Home, but it offers two modes on start up: a standard desktop, which turns it into a run-of-the-mill netbook, and a Disney desktop option, which is where all the action is.

The Disney desktop mode allows multiple profiles to be created and the profiles can be customized with icons from the Disney stable such as Mickey Mouse or Snow White.

In the Disney desktop mode, the netbook includes programs such as Disney Pix, a software application that lets users customize photos; Radio Disney, which endlessly belts out music from Taylor Swift and Jonas Brothers; games; and a customized Disney browser.

There are also Disney desktop themes, with choice that ranges from Cars to Hannah Montana.

Parental Controls

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Parental controls are the netbook’s cornerstone for Disney.  Since the Netpal is for children, the parental controls are a must and Disney’s netbook integrates the software well into the device.

For instance, in the Disney desktop mode with parental controls running, all emails sent and received by the kid need to be approved by the parent. The customized browser also creates a list of restricted and approved sites.

“We wanted to create a user interface that’s fun, easy and safe to use,” says Richmond.

Overall

Adult users are confused between netbooks and notebooks and dissatisfaction with these pint-sized machines runs high, according to a NPD survey. Performance and ease of use of the keyboard remain key issues.

But Disney seems to have its target audience neatly carved out. The netbook will retail at Amazon.com and Toys’R’Us.

If you can get past the incessant Disney branding and the heavy gender stereotyping, the Netpal has some kid-friendly features that just might make this a good netbook for tiny tots.

Photos: Jon Snyder/Wired.com


Firmware Update Fixes MacBook SATA ‘Issue’, Silences Conspiracists

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Apple is a company so highly scrutinized that every tiny decision, mistake or rumor is considered as an Area 51-sized conspiracy. So it was recently with the new MacBook Pros. When it became apparent that there wasn’t much wrong with the updated machines (other than an added FireWire Drive and better battery life), the complainers seemingly dug around to find something, anything, that they could whine about.

This time it was the the poor SATA interface, whose maximum throughput had dropped from 3Gbps to 1.5Gbps. You know things are desperate when that’s the best people can do. What next? Complaints that the power socket requires 0.5v less juice?

The trouble was, the hardware was the exact same hardware as in the previous MacBook Pros, and was therefore capable of the higher speed. Only the firmware was different. Apple has now fixed this with an update. Will this make a difference to most people? No. From Wikipedia: “the fastest mechanical drives barely saturate a SATA 1.5 Gbit/s link.”

And here’s a similar line from Apple:

While this update allows drives to use transfer rates greater than 1.5Gbps, Apple has not qualified or offered these drives for Mac notebooks and their use is unsupported.

While it’s nice that Apple is actually listening to customers now, we hope it doesn’t go too far. Otherwise we’ll end up with a multitasking iPhone with an SD card slot, a proprietary headphone socket and a five-minute battery life. What, someone already makes that?

Update page [Apple]


Netbooks Mutate to Meet Market Challenges


The word netbook may soon vanish into irrelevance, but the products that resulted from the category are not going away any time soon. Indeed, they’re on the verge of injecting their DNA into a broad swath of the PC market.

Despite their shipments slowing down in the first quarter of 2009, inexpensive and low-powered netbooks are poised for rapid growth as their feature sets continue to mature. Research company International Data Corporation forecasts that the netbook market will more than double by the end of 2009.

“The mini notebook is doing what the notebook did,” said Richard Shim, an analyst with IDC. “It went from a very targeted niche into something that appeals to a greater audience with specialized configurations…. The industry gradually changed and moved away from ‘performance is king,’ and now they want a more personalized experience. Now, customization is king.”

Netbooks — 8- to 10-inch notebooks that typically cost between $200 and $500 — saw a boom in 2008 when manufacturers shipped 11.6 million units worldwide. Last year, netbooks were considered some of the hottest gadgets in the tech industry, with several major manufacturers including Toshiba, Dell, HP and Samsung rolling out offerings in this device category. Some analysts say the poor condition of the economy was the primary factor driving the success of netbooks.

However, netbook sales have already slowed down in 2009, and shipments are falling below manufacturers’ expectations. Taiwanese manufacturer Asus, for example, expected to ship 1 million netbooks in the first quarter of 2009, according to a report in DigiTimes. But IDC’s tracking indicates Asus shipped only 700,000 units that quarter.

Shim noted, however, that first-quarter numbers are generally low compared to the rest of the year for any tech manufacturer; most sales come from the holiday and back-to-school seasons. Also, companies are beginning to shift focus onto a category called “consumer ultralow-voltage notebooks” — notebooks with 12- or 13-inch screens containing the same low-powered, inexpensive guts as netbooks. These devices compensate for some of the shortcomings of netbooks — cramped keyboards and small screens — while offering impressive battery life and a light weight of about 3 pounds for a modest price range of $500 to $700. (See our review of Samsung’s $550, $12-inch NC20 notebook as an example.)

If CULV notebooks are considered in the same device category as netbooks, then the netbook category is on track for massive growth. Shim clarified IDC’s definition of a mini notebook: 7- to 12-inch notebooks powered by an Intel Atom processor, capable of running a full operating system such as Windows XP. IDC forecasts manufacturers will ship 26.5 million “mini notebooks” by the end of 2009, or more than double the 11.6 million units shipped in 2008. The mini notebook category has claimed roughly 17 percent of the worldwide notebook market, and IDC expects this number to remain consistent over the next few years.

Michael Gartenberg, a technology strategist at Interpret, has high expectations of these new notebooks. He explained that the more netbooks’ capabilities increase, the more people will buy them. And bigger screens and full-size keyboards definitely add to capability, he said. The notebook space will get very interesting once CULV notebooks drop to $300 or $400, Gartenberg added.

One could say the netbook is “failing” if one doesn’t consider a CULV notebook to be a netbook — but it’s purely semantics at that point. The least that everyone can agree on is that CULV notebooks evolved from netbooks.

“We may just be beginning to see the end of the pure ‘netbook’ era, as vendors start bringing devices to market with 12-inch screens, full-size keyboards and larger hard drives,” Gartenberg said. “The concept of the netbook is beginning to vanish as a thing itself. By the end of the year it’s just going to be called a cheap PC.”

At the recent All Things Digital tech conference, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer called netbooks “revolutionary” devices. But perhaps they would be more accurately described as evolutionary.

In addition to CULV notebooks, netbooks are inspiring other product types as well, said Brad Linder, owner of Liliputing, a blog devoted to compact notebooks. For example, some manufacturers are experimenting with the concept of the “smartbook”: netbook-like devices that run smartphone operating systems such as Android. Given the little power required to run a smartphone OS, the smartbook concept could lead to even thinner notebooks than the ones we see today, as well as incredibly long battery life.

“Netbooks will probably stop being called netbooks at some point: The lines [between netbooks and notebooks] are becoming less distinct as the days go by, and there’s going to be a continuum, “Linder said. “What really happened in the last year or so is [manufacturers] delivered good-enough computing at low cost. And It’s what a lot of people have been waiting for.”

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CrunchPad Prototype Peeks Out Again

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A new video that surfaced briefly promises that CrunchPad, the inexpensive tablet from Web 2.0 personality Michael Arrington, will be ready this year “for sure.”

The video, which has since been removed from YouTube’s site, showed the unboxing of a CrunchPad that looked very similar to the photographs of the device that were out in April.

“This was not a sanctioned or official video, nor is it even very interesting. It’s just the last prototype being taken out of its box,”  wrote Arrington. “It’s certainly not the launch prototype, which doesn’t actually exist yet.”

Arrington first wrote about the idea of a tablet in June last year. He talked of a touchscreen device that would run Firefox and maybe Skype on top of a Linux kernel. The tablet would have low end hardware, a single power button, a headphone jack, a built in camera for video, low end speakers and a microphone. The CrunchPad would also come with Wi-Fi, 512 MB of memory, 4 GB solid state hard drive and no keyboard. All this for a promised price tag of $200.

The latest video was shot at a TechCrunch party last week and showed CrunchPad partner Fusion Garage doing the unboxing, says Arrington on his blog. Beyond the candy colored packing and a rather slick-looking device, the latest peek didn’t offer anything new.

But it has led to questions about whether the CrunchPad can live up to its $200 billing. Based on its specs and overall production, it could end up being priced closer to $400, says James Kendrick at the jkOnTheRun blog. And we are inclined to agree. Though the CrunchPad promises low end hardware and a Linux-based kernel, the touchscreen display, the Wi-Fi chips and solid state hard drive should all add up to a much higher price point that what Arrington is willing to let on.

Another problem that the CrunchPad doesn’t seem to have solved yet. Messy fingerprints on the screen. The unboxing video showed a device whose screen was smudged with grubby fingers.

See also:
Web 2.0 Mogul Michael Arrington Creates New Web Tablet

Photo: Crunchpad Prototype